In 1986,
Proposition 65 requires businesses to notify Californians about significant amounts of chemicals in the products they purchase, in their homes or workplaces, or that are released into the environment. This list includes glass wool fibers of a respirable size that can be inhaled by people.
According to the National Toxicology Program (NTP), “Glass wool fibers are synthetic or man-made, very small finely spun fibers of glass that form a mass resembling wool. There is considerable variation in the properties of individual fibers within this class, depending on the manufacturing process and end use. They are commonly used for insulation or filtration.”
The NTP states that there are generally two categories of glass wool fibers that consumers might use:
1.Low-cost general-purpose fibers and premium special-purpose fibers. Most home and building insulation projects use general-purpose glass wool.
2.Special-purpose glass fibers are used for applications, such as separating the negative and positive plates in a battery, and in high-efficiency air filters and aircraft, spacecraft, and acoustical insulation.
“Most exposures to glass wool fibers occur in the workplace, but home renovation projects can also create situation where people could inhale the dangerous fibers,” reported Joe Frasca, Senior Vice President, Marketing at
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